C I bt it tigan Ninety-six years of editorial freedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, November 14, 1985 1ai13 Vol. XCVI - No. 51 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Eight Pages 'U' P addresses minority enrollment By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Niara Sudarkasa, associate vice president for academic affairs, yesterday called for a "spirit of cooperation rather than confron- tation" in combating problems of minority recruitment and retention. At yesterday's Campus Meet the Press, Sudarkasa commented that this year's slight black enrollment in- crease of 24 students - up one-tenth of a percentage point to 5.2 percent - was a result of "a lot of hard work and was not inconsequential." IN MARCH 1985 she promised to double black enrollment within 3 to 5 years. But Sudarkasa said her goal has changed. "We now intend to double the number of freshman ap- plications in four years. Our yield from applications, about 60 percent, is no different than others, and if we double our applications, we are on the way to doubling our enrollment," See SUDARKASA, Page 3 Officials urge 2 By JILL OSEROWSKY University executive officers recommended this week that two separate, back-to-back spring com- mencement ceremonies be held in Crisler Arena instead of the usual single ceremony conducted at Michigan Stadium. The executive officers also recommended working on methods to increase undergraduate student par- ticipation in the ceremony, such as in- cluding student speakers in addition to guest speakers. The recommendations come in response to suggestions made by an ad hoc commencement committee formed to develop ways to eliminate disruptive behavior at graduation. However, graduate student Randy Tharp, a committee member, said not all of the executive officer's recom- mendations reflect what the commit- tee had in mind. "It's a sharp contrast to what we discussed," Tharp said. "Our whole intention was having it (graduation) ceremonies in the stadium." But Vice President for Student Ser- vices Henry Johnson, an executive of- ficer and chairman of the ad hoc committee, said the executive officers agreed that the graduation committee should consider both the issues of moving the ceremony to Crisler and increasing undergraduate par- ticipation. The graduation committee, separate from the ad hoc commen- cement committee, will meet within a couple weeks to decide whether or not the executive officer's ideas are prac- tical, Johnson said. James Shortt, an assistant to the University president and a member of the graduation committee said he favors the move inside to Crisler Arena to avoid cancellation of the ceremony due to inclement weather. But Shortt said the committee was presently "discussing without any (final) decisions being made." The executive officers have not yet said whether they will split the two ceremonies by class or rank. It is still unkown whether one keynote speaker will address both ceremonies or a dif- ferent speaker will be chosen for each one. The ad hoc committee made several "organizational and ceremonial" suggestions to the executive commit- tee, including the elimination of the pre-commencement processional, holding the doctoral ceremony separately, and achieving more student participation in the event. "Some members of the (ad hoc) committee expressed the point of view that being in the stadium con- tributed to the game-type atmosphere that has been evident at the last two (spring) commencements," Tharp said. "You can alleviate that by get- ting the students involved in the ceremony, "he added. "It sounds like one of the executive officers had their own idea," said Tharp of the suggested move indoors. "I kind of feel like the committee wasted its its time." vigil Daily Photo by JAE KIM Students, professors, and Ann Arbor residents gathered on the Diag last night for a cuindlelight vigil in support of Soviet Jews being held as prisoners in the Soviet Union. See story, page 6. MSA may reduce funds if committee is formed By JERRY MARKON The Michigan Student Assembly may reduce its use of student funds if a proposed -committee that plans to pursue alternative funding for the assembly is approved by the student body in MSA's special election next week. The MSA Development Committee would .seek funding for assembly projects from private corporations and University alumni -to supplement the $5.07 the assembly .charges each term on students' tuition bills, according to Bruce Belcher, an MSA representative from Rackham. "AT THIS point, I'm not sure we'd get enough to lower the tuition amount. If we did raise enough funds to meet our needs, we would try to lower it," Belcher said. But Richard Layman, who is alos involved in the project, said Belcher's idea has never been discussed within MSA. He added that he would prefer to redirect any supplemen- tal funds into MSA's internal operations. MSA President Paul Josephson said "there has been no clear goal for the development committee," but he confirmed that an eventual reduction of student fees is "possible" - if the committee can raise enough money. BELCHER and Layman are members of the assembly's Committee on Reorganization (COR) which was formed last summer to evaluate MSA's internal structure. COR has proposed the Development Committee and other changes in the MSA Constitution that will be presented to the student body this Monday and Tuesday when the assembly holds a special election in conjunction with LSA student gover- nment elections. According to the existing MSA con- stitution, the majority approval of the student body is required to approve the COR changes, which have been approved by the assembly and will revise the assembly's existing committee and representative structure. COR HAS proposed that the assembly elect some of its representatives every November, in addition to the March elec- tions of the present system. Each represen- tative would still serve a one-year term. "This change alone would double the ef- ficiency of MSA," Josephson said, ex- plaining that the dual terms would facilitate training and avoid having all new represen- tatives elected every March. Another key constitutional change up for approval this week is a proposal to increase the number of MSA representatives by about 25 percent. Belcher said such an increase would provide the assembly with "more human resources" which he said would spread work out better and enable representatives to contact their constituents. IN ADDITION, the assembly will attempt to impose stricter requirements on its representatives, mandating that they each serve on an MSA Committee, put in work during MSA elections, and "contact con- stituents on a regular basis." See MSA, Page 3 LSA parties compete for top spot By NANCY DRISCOLL For the first time in four years, three student parties are competing for the top spot in next year's LSA ,student government elections. A fourth party is fielding can- didates for LSA representative positions but has not nominated a presidential or vice presidential can- didate. THE CAMPAIGNS have focused on the effectiveness of the currentLSA- SG administration. Michelle Tear, the current president of LSA-SG is running for re- election with the SAID (Students for *Academic and Institutional Development) party. "Experience is the biggest issue of the campaign," Tear, a junior said. According to Tear, this is the first time an incumbent president has run for a second term. HER RUNNING mate is junior Michael Rolnick, who has been a LSA representative since September. "We're running on the fact that in the past we've listened to students and *id what they wanted us to do," Tear said. Steve Herz, a sophomore, the Ac- tion party's presidential candidate disagrees: "We don't think that the present administration is in touch with students. Most people don't know who's running the show in LSA gover- nment. Until this week, no one knew what LSA-SG achieved." HERZ'S RUNNING mate is junior Liz Uchitelle. be ore e "My goal is to get more students in- volved," Herz said. "We can encourage participation through surveys, and by talking to people," Herz said. He questioned the use of the $100 student computer fee. "The University should be accoun- table to every dollar. We should know it is going to benefit the students." "THE CAUSE (Concerned About University Student Education) party also has a platform of increased student involvement. "We will make sure that we are constantly available to the student body," said Keith Titen, CAUSE's presidential candidate. Titen and his running mate June Kirchgatter want to institute the idea of holding LSA-SG office hours in the Fishbowl. "You can't represent the student body if you don't know what they want," Titen said. CAUSE'S BIGGEST concern is campus security. According to Titen, his party would like to improve the Night Owl and set up a system of escorts in the major libraries. He would like to see a specified area in the library for escort volunteers and as a gathering place for students walking home, so they will not have to go alone. The SAID party is stressing its ac- complishments of the past year. Ac- cording to Tear, her administration worked toward increasing teaching assistant proficiency and was suc- cessful in getting a student on the TA testing committee. Tear also said that lections her administration was effective in reprioritizing CRISP, allowing juniors as well as seniors to have registration priority over freshmen and sophomores. Tear's administration is working on getting a lounge back in the Un- dergraduate Library and on reorganizing graduation cermonies. "I have a stake in making sure these things get done," Tear said and called her one-and-one half years as a representative and term as president "invaluable experience." "(THE OTHER candidates) haven't been involved in any kind of student government. You can't just come in and take over and be effec- tive," Tear said. All three parties oppose the proposed code of non-academic con- duct. The ACTION party would like to see a student bill of rights instead of the code. Onthe issue of granting LSA students credit for ROTC courses, both CAUSE and ACTION support the idea, while SAID is still investigating the issue. "ONLY DEAD fish go with the flow. Vote for a change," is the slogan of SDS (Students for a Democratic School), the fourth party running a slate of candidates in the election. "Our party thinks things have been stale. We want to make it more in- teresting so that students want to get involved," said senior, Annette See THREE, Page 6 Daily Photo by JAE KIM Author Tom Wolfe wears his trademark white suit as he prepares to address a crowd at Rackham last night. He joked about modern society and spoke of his upcoming novel. Wolfe satirizes modern society By ALAN PAUL Tom Wolfe, author of a dozen books including The Right Stuff, spoke last night to a standing room only crowd of over 1,100 at Rackham Auditorium. After an introduction by LSA Dean Peter Steiner, Wolfe took the podium clad in his trademark white suit. The first half of Wolfe's talk resembled a standup comedian's monologue and from the beginning Wolfe had the crowd in his pocket. "WHY HAS the great novel about the American University not been written?" he asked. "I would start with an established large Mid- westernschool. I'd have to pick - Ohio State." Smiling and obviously ap- preciative of the crowd's favorable response, Wolfe proceeded to parody amateur, particularly college, athletics. "The term amateur athletics can only produce snickers today," he said. "Major college athletes are encouraged to live like mercenaries so what does anyone expect from them? No one should be dumbfoun- ded by the recent 'scandals.' " WOLFE WENT on to lampoon modern society from pornography to Rambo to the high divorce rate. "I'm really a pollyanna," Wolfe said after his talk. "I really don't get See WOLFE, Page 3 I TODAY Graduating to Gorbachev T AST YEAR, University seniors got to listen to Gov. James Blanchard speak at commen- seniors already had signed petitions endorsing Gor- bachev as their choice and more names are added every day, said Mark Fleischauer, an organizer of the "Draft Gorbachev" movement. Despite the list of student recommendations, university President Donald Kennedy gets the final choice. What are the chances of Gorbachev coming to the University? in the nation, reflects "common sense," but opponents call it misguided and argue that "parents ought to decide and not the government." At issue are perfor- mances at the Convention Center Arena, owned by San Antonio, the naton's 10th largest city. The ordinance, which comes up for debate Thursday, would bar anyone younger than 13 from concerts at which sadistic or mn~j.,)iE4 ,..,vn a vnpt 4- It,,,f i y 4- INSIDE SCHIZOPHRENIC: Arts tries to say everything about Simple Minds. See Page 5. PACKER: Sports profiles former Michigan d I